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THE DEVELOPMENTAL BASIS OF TRISTYLY IN EICHHORNIA PANICULATA (PONTEDERIACEAE)
Author(s) -
Richards Jennifer H.,
Barrett Spencer C. H.
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/j.1537-2197.1984.tb11992.x
Subject(s) - biology , stamen , gynoecium , botany , tepal , pollen , commelinaceae , appendage , anatomy
Eichhornia paniculata is a tristylous, self‐compatible, emergent aquatic. A given plant produces flowers with either long, mid or short styles and two levels of stamens equal in length to the styles not found in that flower. Flowers of each morph have two whorls of three tepals, six stamens and three fused carpels. The six stamens differentiate into two sets of three stamens each. A relatively short set, having either short‐ or mid‐level stamens, occurs on the upper side of the flower, while a relatively long set, having either mid‐ or long‐level stamens, occurs on the lower side. Stamen level depends on differences among stamens in filament length and position of insertion on the floral tube. Floral parts arise in whorls of three, but the two stamen whorls do not form the two sets of stamens found in each mature flower. Instead, stamens from both whorls make up a given set. Floral differences among morphs are not present at flower origin or floral organ initiation. Morphological differences arise first among stamen sets. The two sets within a flower differ prior to meiosis in the size, number, and timing of comparable developmental events in the sporogenous cells. After these initial differences arise, anther size diverges. In later developmental stages differences in filament and floral tube length, cell size, and cell number, as well as differences in the length, cell size, and cell number of styles, develop among morphs. This sequence of developmental events suggests that the genes controlling development in different morphs do not control flower and floral organ initiation but are first morphologically visible in sporogenous cell differentiation.